FSA Practice Test: Free Florida Standards Assessment Prep
Free FSA practice test with questions and answer explanations. Prepare for the 2026 May exam with instant scoring.

The Florida Standards Assessment measures how well Florida students have mastered grade-level standards in English Language Arts and Mathematics. Whether you're a student getting ready to test, a parent helping your child prepare, or a teacher building review materials, this guide walks you through what the FSA looks like, how it's scored, and how to use practice tests effectively.
The best preparation isn't just reading notes. It's working through realistic practice questions that mirror the test's format, so the real thing feels familiar when test day comes.
What Is the FSA?
The Florida Standards Assessment is a standards-based test developed by the Florida Department of Education (FDOE) to measure student proficiency against Florida's academic standards — the Benchmarks for Excellent Student Thinking (B.E.S.T.) for newer grades, and earlier Florida Standards for older end-of-course exams.
The FSA isn't designed to trick students. It's designed to measure whether they can apply what they've learned at grade level. Questions are aligned to specific standards, so gaps in understanding of particular concepts show up clearly in results.
End-of-course FSA assessments in Algebra 1 and Geometry are required for high school graduation under current Florida law. Students must earn a passing score or meet alternative criteria (concordant scores from ACT/SAT, for example) to satisfy graduation requirements.
ELA vs. Math FSA
The FSA has two main subject areas at the end-of-course level:
- ELA (English Language Arts): Tests reading comprehension, literary analysis, informational text, and writing. The reading section uses passages followed by multiple-choice, multi-select, and technology-enhanced questions. The writing section asks students to write an argumentative or informational essay based on provided passages.
- Math (Algebra 1 and Geometry): Tests mathematical reasoning, problem solving, and concept application. Questions include multiple choice, multi-select, equation response, and matching items.

| Section | Questions | Time |
|---|---|---|
| FSA ELA Reading (EOC) | 60 | — |
| FSA ELA Writing (EOC) | 1 | — |
| FSA Algebra 1 EOC | 66 | — |
| FSA Geometry EOC | 68 | — |
FSA Scoring: What the Numbers Mean
FSA scores are reported on a scale that varies by grade and subject. For end-of-course exams like Algebra 1 and Geometry, scores fall into five achievement levels:
- Level 1 — Below Grade Level (lowest)
- Level 2 — Below Grade Level (approaching)
- Level 3 — On Grade Level
- Level 4 — Above Grade Level
- Level 5 — Above Grade Level (highest)
Level 3 is typically the minimum required for a satisfactory result. For graduation purposes, Algebra 1 EOC requires a passing score (typically Level 3 or equivalent concordant score). See the FSA scores and passing guide for a full breakdown of score ranges by assessment and what each level means for your student.
- ✓Confirm your exam appointment and location
- ✓Bring required identification documents
- ✓Arrive 30 minutes early to check in
- ✓Read each question carefully before answering
- ✓Flag difficult questions and return to them later
- ✓Manage your time — don't spend too long on one question
- ✓Review flagged questions before submitting

How to Use FSA Practice Tests Effectively
Taking a practice test without a strategy doesn't give you much. Here's how to actually get value from the preparation process.
Start With a Diagnostic
Before you study anything, take a complete practice test under timed conditions. Note which questions you missed, which ones you guessed on, and which ones you got right but weren't sure about. This gives you a real picture of where you are — not where you think you are.
Review by Standard, Not Just by Question
When you miss a question, don't just read the explanation and move on. Identify which standard or concept the question is testing. Then look for 3–5 more questions covering the same standard. Drilling the specific skill builds actual competency; reviewing one question at a time doesn't.
Use the Official Item Specifications
The FDOE publishes item specifications — documents that describe exactly what standards each question type addresses and how questions are constructed. These are technical, but they're the closest thing to seeing the test blueprint. Teachers and tutors especially benefit from using these alongside practice questions.
Simulate Test Conditions
Take at least one complete practice test under real conditions: timed, no interruptions, no looking things up. The FSA is computer-based, so if you can practice on a screen rather than paper, that's preferable. Students who've never typed a full essay in a timed setting on a keyboard often struggle more with the format than the content.

FSA ELA Practice Test: What to Focus On
The ELA FSA has two parts — reading and writing — and both require different preparation strategies.
Reading Section Strategies
The reading section tests your ability to find evidence, make inferences, analyze author's craft, compare texts, and understand informational content. A few strategies that consistently help:
Read the questions before the passage. This sounds counterintuitive but knowing what you're looking for makes the reading more efficient. You're not reading for pleasure — you're reading to find specific information.
Annotate as you read. Even on a computer, you can highlight. Mark topic sentences, transitions, and points where the author makes a claim or uses evidence. This saves time when you go back to answer questions.
For multi-select questions, eliminate first. Multi-select items (where you choose 2 or 3 correct answers) are worth more points and require more precision. Eliminate clearly wrong answers before selecting. Don't just pick the first option that seems right.
Writing Section Strategies
The writing section gives you sources to read and asks you to write an argumentative or informational essay. The key is structure: introduction with a clear thesis, body paragraphs with specific evidence from the provided texts, and a conclusion that restates your position.
You don't need to rely only on the provided texts — you can include your own knowledge — but students who reference the texts with specific evidence score significantly higher than those who write purely from personal opinion. Practice using quotations and paraphrases effectively before test day.
FSA Math Practice Test: What to Focus On
The Algebra 1 EOC is the most commonly taken FSA math assessment, and it's required for high school graduation. The Geometry EOC follows for students in the next math course.
Algebra 1 High-Frequency Topics
Based on FDOE standards and historical test data, the heaviest topics on the Algebra 1 EOC are:
- Linear equations and inequalities — solving, graphing, and interpreting
- Systems of equations — solving by substitution, elimination, and graphing
- Functions — identifying, evaluating, comparing linear and nonlinear functions
- Polynomials — operations and factoring
- Statistics — interpreting data displays, measures of center and spread
If you're running short on study time, prioritize linear equations and functions. They make up the bulk of the test.
Calculator Use
Part of the Algebra 1 EOC allows calculator use; part doesn't. Practice both with and without a calculator. Don't become dependent on technology for basic operations — some questions require mental math fluency that a calculator can't replace.
Equation Response Questions
Some questions ask you to type in a numeric answer rather than choose from options. There's no partial credit — you either get it right or you don't. Practice these specifically because the format is different from standard multiple choice, and errors in entering decimals or fractions can cost you points that your work actually earned.
- ▸Complete a full FSA practice test (ELA or Math depending on your exam)
- ▸Identify which question types and standards you missed most
- ▸Create a prioritized list of topics to study based on gaps
- ▸For ELA: focus on evidence-based reading and multi-select question strategies
- ▸For Math: review linear equations, functions, and systems of equations
- ▸Complete 20–30 targeted practice questions daily in weak areas
- ▸For ELA: write two timed essays using the FSA format (60–90 min each)
- ▸For Math: practice equation-response and multi-select questions
- ▸Review every missed question and identify the specific standard tested
- ▸Take a complete timed practice test in conditions matching the real exam
- ▸Review results and final weak areas only
- ▸Light review day before test — no new material, rest well
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.